Google points to Iowa for sowing satellite antenna farm

If approved by the FCC, Google's satellite dishes could get feeds
from broadcast networks and even be bundled with the company's
high-speed fiber service.
Google announced earlier this month that it was gearing up to start laying fiber-optic lines
from Kansas to Missouri in a project focusing on creating higher-speed
Internet access. Now, the Web giant is setting it sights on Iowa,
according to Data Center Knowledge.

In a small city of Council Bluffs, Google Fiber is looking to
erect a satellite antenna farm on a 1,000-acre track of land near its
data center. If all goes according to Google's plans, the antennas would
receive feeds from broadcast networks and even be bundled with the
high-speed fiber service, according to Data Center Knowledge. When Google first announced its nation-wide Google Fiber project in 2010, around 1,100 U.S. towns and cities applied
to get in on the deal. In cases such as the Kansas to Missouri line,
general manager of Google Access Kevin Lo said, "new high-speed
infrastructure will ultimately be carrying Kansas Citians' data at
speeds more than 100 times faster than what most Americans have today."
In order to get the antenna project started, Google still needs
permission from the Federal Communications Commission to use satellite
data. According to Data Center Knowledge, the 4.5-meter satellite dishes
would provide analog and digital audio, data, and video services via
access to transmissions from satellites including Intelsat 9, which
carries international television programming.
Last November, Google mentioned that it was considering adding TV services
to its high-speed fiber service in the Kansas to Missouri line. And,
according to Data Center Knowledge, Google's Eric Schmidt announced in
December that, "by the summer of 2012, the majority of the televisions
you see in stores will have Google TV embedded."